First-generation Semantic Web applications typically use one ontology---or at most, a few---that ontology engineers built, selected, and integrated at design time. In contrast, the next generation of Semantic Web applications will dynamically exploit the Semantic Web as a large-scale source of distributed knowledge. The authors have implemented several next-generation applications and have gained, in the process, insights about the Semantic Web's current status, strengths, and limitations. An analysis of their initial results also indicates near-future directions for the Semantic Web, as well as upcoming challenges and opportunities. This article is part of a special issue called Semantic Web Update.
%0 Journal Article
%1 AquinMottaEtAl08intelligent
%A d'Aquin, Mathieu
%A Motta, Enrico
%A Sabou, Marta
%A Angeletou, Sofia
%A Gridinoc, Laurian
%A Lopez, Vanessa
%A Guidi, Davide
%D 2008
%J IEEE Intelligent Systems
%K v1205 ieee paper ai semantic web application ontology language processing knowledge retrieval answer
%N 3
%P 20-28
%R 10.1109/MIS.2008.54
%T Toward a New Generation of Semantic Web Applications
%V 23
%X First-generation Semantic Web applications typically use one ontology---or at most, a few---that ontology engineers built, selected, and integrated at design time. In contrast, the next generation of Semantic Web applications will dynamically exploit the Semantic Web as a large-scale source of distributed knowledge. The authors have implemented several next-generation applications and have gained, in the process, insights about the Semantic Web's current status, strengths, and limitations. An analysis of their initial results also indicates near-future directions for the Semantic Web, as well as upcoming challenges and opportunities. This article is part of a special issue called Semantic Web Update.
@article{AquinMottaEtAl08intelligent,
abstract = {First-generation Semantic Web applications typically use one ontology---or at most, a few---that ontology engineers built, selected, and integrated at design time. In contrast, the next generation of Semantic Web applications will dynamically exploit the Semantic Web as a large-scale source of distributed knowledge. The authors have implemented several next-generation applications and have gained, in the process, insights about the Semantic Web's current status, strengths, and limitations. An analysis of their initial results also indicates near-future directions for the Semantic Web, as well as upcoming challenges and opportunities. This article is part of a special issue called Semantic Web Update.},
added-at = {2012-05-30T10:42:29.000+0200},
author = {d'Aquin, Mathieu and Motta, Enrico and Sabou, Marta and Angeletou, Sofia and Gridinoc, Laurian and Lopez, Vanessa and Guidi, Davide},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2084182f77e155c591cbb3dec03ce8029/flint63},
doi = {10.1109/MIS.2008.54},
file = {IEEE Digital Library:2008/AquinMottaEtAl08intelligent.pdf:PDF},
groups = {public},
interhash = {695c8c44ccd6486092d0c4fe2e816003},
intrahash = {084182f77e155c591cbb3dec03ce8029},
issn = {1541-1672},
journal = {IEEE Intelligent Systems},
keywords = {v1205 ieee paper ai semantic web application ontology language processing knowledge retrieval answer},
number = 3,
pages = {20-28},
timestamp = {2018-04-16T11:49:33.000+0200},
title = {Toward a New Generation of Semantic Web Applications},
username = {flint63},
volume = 23,
year = 2008
}